ELF(5) manual page
Table of Contents
elf - format of Executable and Linking
Format (ELF) files
#include <elf.h>
The header file <elf.h> defines the format of ELF
executable binary files. Amongst these files are normal executable files,
relocatable object files, core files and shared libraries.
An executable
file using the ELF file format consists of an ELF header, followed by a
program header table or a section header table, or both. The ELF header
is always at offset zero of the file. The program header table and the section
header table’s offset in the file are defined in the ELF header. The two
tables describe the rest of the particularities of the file.
This header file describes the above mentioned headers as C
structures and also includes structures for dynamic sections, relocation
sections and symbol tables.
The following types are used for N-bit architectures
(N=32,64, ElfN stands for Elf32 or Elf64, uintN_t stands for uint32_t or
uint64_t):
ElfN_Addr Unsigned program address, uintN_t
ElfN_Off Unsigned file offset, uintN_t
ElfN_Section Unsigned section index, uint16_t
ElfN_Versym Unsigned version symbol information, uint16_t
Elf_Byte unsigned char
ElfN_Half uint16_t
ElfN_Sword int32_t
ElfN_Word uint32_t
ElfN_Sxword int64_t
ElfN_Xword uint64_t
(Note: The *BSD terminology is a bit different. There Elf64_Half is twice
as large as Elf32_Half, and Elf64Quarter is used for uint16_t. In order
to avoid confusion these types are replaced by explicit ones in the below.)
All data structures that the file format defines follow the "natural" size
and alignment guidelines for the relevant class. If necessary, data structures
contain explicit padding to ensure 4-byte alignment for 4-byte objects, to
force structure sizes to a multiple of 4, and so on.
The ELF header is described
by the type Elf32_Ehdr or Elf64_Ehdr:
#define EI_NIDENT 16
typedef struct {
unsigned char e_ident[EI_NIDENT];
uint16_t e_type;
uint16_t e_machine;
uint32_t e_version;
ElfN_Addr e_entry;
ElfN_Off e_phoff;
ElfN_Off e_shoff;
uint32_t e_flags;
uint16_t e_ehsize;
uint16_t e_phentsize;
uint16_t e_phnum;
uint16_t e_shentsize;
uint16_t e_shnum;
uint16_t e_shstrndx;
} ElfN_Ehdr;
The fields have the following meanings:
- e_ident
- This array of bytes specifies
to interpret the file, independent of the processor or the file’s remaining
contents. Within this array everything is named by macros, which start with
the prefix EI_ and may contain values which start with the prefix ELF. The
following macros are defined:
- EI_MAG0
- The first byte of the magic number.
It must be filled with ELFMAG0. (0: 0x7f)
- EI_MAG1
- The second byte of the
magic number. It must be filled with ELFMAG1. (1: aqEaq)
- EI_MAG2
- The third
byte of the magic number. It must be filled with ELFMAG2. (2: aqLaq)
- EI_MAG3
- The fourth byte of the magic number. It must be filled with ELFMAG3. (3:
aqFaq)
- EI_CLASS
- The fifth byte identifies the architecture for this binary:
- ELFCLASSNONE
- This class is invalid.
- ELFCLASS32
- This defines the 32-bit
architecture. It supports machines with files and virtual address spaces
up to 4 Gigabytes.
- ELFCLASS64
- This defines the 64-bit architecture.
- EI_DATA
- The sixth byte specifies the data encoding of the processor-specific data
in the file. Currently these encodings are supported:
- ELFDATANONE
- Unknown
data format.
- ELFDATA2LSB
- Two’s complement, little-endian.
- ELFDATA2MSB
- Two’s
complement, big-endian.
- EI_VERSION
- The seventh byte is the version number
of the ELF specification:
- EV_NONE
- Invalid version.
- EV_CURRENT
- Current version.
- EI_OSABI
- The eighth byte identifies the operating system and ABI to which
the object is targeted. Some fields in other ELF structures have flags and
values that have platform-specific meanings; the interpretation of those
fields is determined by the value of this byte. For example:
- ELFOSABI_NONE
- Same as ELFOSABI_SYSV
- ELFOSABI_SYSV
- UNIX System V ABI.
- ELFOSABI_HPUX
- HP-UX ABI.
- ELFOSABI_NETBSD
- NetBSD ABI.
- ELFOSABI_LINUX
- Linux ABI.
- ELFOSABI_SOLARIS
- Solaris ABI.
- ELFOSABI_IRIX
- IRIX ABI.
- ELFOSABI_FREEBSD
- FreeBSD ABI.
- ELFOSABI_TRU64
- TRU64 UNIX ABI.
- ELFOSABI_ARM
- ARM architecture
ABI.
- ELFOSABI_STANDALONE
- Stand-alone (embedded) ABI.
- EI_ABIVERSION
- The
ninth byte identifies the version of the ABI to which the object is targeted.
This field is used to distinguish among incompatible versions of an ABI.
The interpretation of this version number is dependent on the ABI identified
by the EI_OSABI field. Applications conforming to this specification use
the value 0.
- EI_PAD
- Start of padding. These bytes are reserved and set to
zero. Programs which read them should ignore them. The value for EI_PAD will
change in the future if currently unused bytes are given meanings.
- EI_NIDENT
- The size of the e_ident array.
- e_type
- This member of the structure
identifies the object file type:
- ET_NONE
- An unknown type.
- ET_REL
- A relocatable
file.
- ET_EXEC
- An executable file.
- ET_DYN
- A shared object.
- ET_CORE
- A core file.
- e_machine
- This member specifies the required architecture for an individual
file. For example:
- EM_NONE
- An unknown machine.
- EM_M32
- AT&T WE 32100.
- EM_SPARC
- Sun Microsystems SPARC.
- EM_386
- Intel 80386.
- EM_68K
- Motorola 68000.
- EM_88K
- Motorola 88000.
- EM_860
- Intel 80860.
- EM_MIPS
- MIPS RS3000 (big-endian
only).
- EM_PARISC
- HP/PA.
- EM_SPARC32PLUS
- SPARC with enhanced instruction
set.
- EM_PPC
- PowerPC.
- EM_PPC64
- PowerPC 64-bit.
- EM_S390
- IBM S/390
- EM_ARM
- Advanced RISC Machines
- EM_SH
- Renesas SuperH
- EM_SPARCV9
- SPARC v9 64-bit.
- EM_IA_64
- Intel Itanium
- EM_X86_64
- AMD x86-64
- EM_VAX
- DEC Vax.
- e_version
- This member identifies the file version:
- EV_NONE
- Invalid version.
- EV_CURRENT
- Current version.
- e_entry
- This member gives the virtual address
to which the system first transfers control, thus starting the process.
If the file has no associated entry point, this member holds zero.
- e_phoff
- This member holds the program header table’s file offset in bytes. If the
file has no program header table, this member holds zero.
- e_shoff
- This member
holds the section header table’s file offset in bytes. If the file has no
section header table, this member holds zero.
- e_flags
- This member holds
processor-specific flags associated with the file. Flag names take the form
EF_‘machine_flag’. Currently no flags have been defined.
- e_ehsize
- This member
holds the ELF header’s size in bytes.
- e_phentsize
- This member holds the size
in bytes of one entry in the file’s program header table; all entries are
the same size.
- e_phnum
- This member holds the number of entries in the program
header table. Thus the product of e_phentsize and e_phnum gives the table’s
size in bytes. If a file has no program header, e_phnum holds the value
zero.
- If the number of entries in the program header table is larger than
or equal to
- PN_XNUM (0xffff), this member holds PN_XNUM (0xffff) and the
real number of entries in the program header table is held in the sh_info
member of the initial entry in section header table. Otherwise, the sh_info
member of the initial entry contains the value zero.
- PN_XNUM
- This is defined
as 0xffff, the largest number e_phnum can have, specifying where the actual
number of program headers is assigned.
- e_shentsize
- This member holds a
sections header’s size in bytes. A section header is one entry in the section
header table; all entries are the same size.
- e_shnum
- This member holds the
number of entries in the section header table. Thus the product of e_shentsize
and e_shnum gives the section header table’s size in bytes. If a file has
no section header table, e_shnum holds the value of zero.
- If the number
of entries in the section header table is larger than or equal to
- SHN_LORESERVE
(0xff00), e_shnum holds the value zero and the real number of entries in
the section header table is held in the sh_size member of the initial entry
in section header table. Otherwise, the sh_size member of the initial entry
in the section header table holds the value zero.
- e_shstrndx
- This member
holds the section header table index of the entry associated with the section
name string table. If the file has no section name string table, this member
holds the value SHN_UNDEF.
- If the index of section name string table section
is larger than or equal to
- SHN_LORESERVE (0xff00), this member holds SHN_XINDEX
(0xffff) and the real index of the section name string table section is
held in the sh_link member of the initial entry in section header table.
Otherwise, the sh_link member of the initial entry in section header table
contains the value zero.
- SHN_UNDEF
- This value marks an undefined, missing,
irrelevant, or otherwise meaningless section reference. For example, a symbol
"defined" relative to section number SHN_UNDEF is an undefined symbol.
- SHN_LORESERVE
- This value specifies the lower bound of the range of reserved indices.
- SHN_LOPROC
- Values greater than or equal to SHN_HIPROC are reserved for processor-specific
semantics.
- SHN_HIPROC
- Values less than or equal to SHN_LOPROC are reserved
for processor-specific semantics.
- SHN_ABS
- This value specifies absolute values
for the corresponding reference. For example, symbols defined relative to
section number SHN_ABS have absolute values and are not affected by relocation.
- SHN_COMMON
- Symbols defined relative to this section are common symbols,
such as Fortran COMMON or unallocated C external variables.
- SHN_HIRESERVE
- This value specifies the upper bound of the range of reserved indices between
SHN_LORESERVE and SHN_HIRESERVE, inclusive; the values do not reference
the section header table. That is, the section header table does not contain
entries for the reserved indices.
An executable or shared object file’s
program header table is an array of structures, each describing a segment
or other information the system needs to prepare the program for execution.
An object file segment contains one or more sections. Program headers are
meaningful only for executable and shared object files. A file specifies
its own program header size with the ELF header’s e_phentsize and e_phnum
members. The ELF program header is described by the type Elf32_Phdr or Elf64_Phdr
depending on the architecture:
typedef struct {
uint32_t p_type;
Elf32_Off p_offset;
Elf32_Addr p_vaddr;
Elf32_Addr p_paddr;
uint32_t p_filesz;
uint32_t p_memsz;
uint32_t p_flags;
uint32_t p_align;
} Elf32_Phdr;
typedef struct {
uint32_t p_type;
uint32_t p_flags;
Elf64_Off p_offset;
Elf64_Addr p_vaddr;
Elf64_Addr p_paddr;
uint64_t p_filesz;
uint64_t p_memsz;
uint64_t p_align;
} Elf64_Phdr;
The main difference between the 32-bit and the 64-bit program header lies
in the location of the p_flags member in the total struct.
- p_type
- This
member of the Phdr struct tells what kind of segment this array element
describes or how to interpret the array element’s information.
- PT_NULL
- The
array element is unused and the other members’ values are undefined. This
lets the program header have ignored entries.
- PT_LOAD
- The array element
specifies a loadable segment, described by p_filesz and p_memsz. The bytes
from the file are mapped to the beginning of the memory segment. If the
segment’s memory size p_memsz is larger than the file size p_filesz, the
"extra" bytes are defined to hold the value 0 and to follow the segment’s
initialized area. The file size may not be larger than the memory size. Loadable
segment entries in the program header table appear in ascending order,
sorted on the p_vaddr member.
- PT_DYNAMIC
- The array element specifies dynamic
linking information.
- PT_INTERP
- The array element specifies the location
and size of a null-terminated pathname to invoke as an interpreter. This
segment type is meaningful only for executable files (though it may occur
for shared objects). However it may not occur more than once in a file. If
it is present, it must precede any loadable segment entry.
- PT_NOTE
- The array
element specifies the location and size for auxiliary information.
- PT_SHLIB
- This segment type is reserved but has unspecified semantics. Programs that
contain an array element of this type do not conform to the ABI.
- PT_PHDR
- The array element, if present, specifies the location and size of the program
header table itself, both in the file and in the memory image of the program.
This segment type may not occur more than once in a file. Moreover, it may
occur only if the program header table is part of the memory image of the
program. If it is present, it must precede any loadable segment entry.
- PT_LOPROC
- Values greater than or equal to PT_HIPROC are reserved for processor-specific
semantics.
- PT_HIPROC
- Values less than or equal to PT_LOPROC are reserved
for processor-specific semantics.
- PT_GNU_STACK
- GNU extension which is used
by the Linux kernel to control the state of the stack via the flags set
in the p_flags member.
- p_offset
- This member holds the offset from the beginning
of the file at which the first byte of the segment resides.
- p_vaddr
- This
member holds the virtual address at which the first byte of the segment
resides in memory.
- p_paddr
- On systems for which physical addressing is relevant,
this member is reserved for the segment’s physical address. Under BSD this
member is not used and must be zero.
- p_filesz
- This member holds the number
of bytes in the file image of the segment. It may be zero.
- p_memsz
- This member
holds the number of bytes in the memory image of the segment. It may be
zero.
- p_flags
- This member holds a bit mask of flags relevant to the segment:
- PF_X
- An executable segment.
- PF_W
- A writable segment.
- PF_R
- A readable segment.
- A text segment commonly has the flags
- PF_X and PF_R. A data segment commonly
has PF_X, PF_W and PF_R.
- p_align
- This member holds the value to which the
segments are aligned in memory and in the file. Loadable process segments
must have congruent values for p_vaddr and p_offset, modulo the page size.
Values of zero and one mean no alignment is required. Otherwise, p_align
should be a positive, integral power of two, and p_vaddr should equal p_offset,
modulo p_align.
A file’s section header table lets one locate all the file’s
sections. The section header table is an array of Elf32_Shdr or Elf64_Shdr
structures. The ELF header’s e_shoff member gives the byte offset from the
beginning of the file to the section header table. e_shnum holds the number
of entries the section header table contains. e_shentsize holds the size
in bytes of each entry.
A section header table index is a subscript into
this array. Some section header table indices are reserved: the initial
entry and the indices between SHN_LORESERVE and SHN_HIRESERVE. The initial
entry is used in ELF extensions for e_phnum, e_shnum and e_strndx; in other
cases, each field in the initial entry is set to zero. An object file does
not have sections for these special indices:
- SHN_UNDEF
- This value marks
an undefined, missing, irrelevant, or otherwise meaningless section reference.
- SHN_LORESERVE
- This value specifies the lower bound of the range of reserved
indices.
- SHN_LOPROC
- Values greater than or equal to SHN_HIPROC are reserved
for processor-specific semantics.
- SHN_HIPROC
- Values less than or equal to
SHN_LOPROC are reserved for processor-specific semantics.
- SHN_ABS
- This value
specifies the absolute value for the corresponding reference. For example,
a symbol defined relative to section number SHN_ABS has an absolute value
and is not affected by relocation.
- SHN_COMMON
- Symbols defined relative to
this section are common symbols, such as FORTRAN COMMON or unallocated
C external variables.
- SHN_HIRESERVE
- This value specifies the upper bound
of the range of reserved indices. The system reserves indices between SHN_LORESERVE
and SHN_HIRESERVE, inclusive. The section header table does not contain
entries for the reserved indices.
The section header has the following
structure:
typedef struct {
uint32_t sh_name;
uint32_t sh_type;
uint32_t sh_flags;
Elf32_Addr sh_addr;
Elf32_Off sh_offset;
uint32_t sh_size;
uint32_t sh_link;
uint32_t sh_info;
uint32_t sh_addralign;
uint32_t sh_entsize;
} Elf32_Shdr;
typedef struct {
uint32_t sh_name;
uint32_t sh_type;
uint64_t sh_flags;
Elf64_Addr sh_addr;
Elf64_Off sh_offset;
uint64_t sh_size;
uint32_t sh_link;
uint32_t sh_info;
uint64_t sh_addralign;
uint64_t sh_entsize;
} Elf64_Shdr;
No real differences exist between the 32-bit and 64-bit section headers.
- sh_name
- This member specifies the name of the section. Its value is an
index into the section header string table section, giving the location
of a null-terminated string.
- sh_type
- This member categorizes the section’s
contents and semantics.
- SHT_NULL
- This value marks the section header as
inactive. It does not have an associated section. Other members of the section
header have undefined values.
- SHT_PROGBITS
- This section holds information
defined by the program, whose format and meaning are determined solely
by the program.
- SHT_SYMTAB
- This section holds a symbol table. Typically,
SHT_SYMTAB provides symbols for link editing, though it may also be used
for dynamic linking. As a complete symbol table, it may contain many symbols
unnecessary for dynamic linking. An object file can also contain a SHT_DYNSYM
section.
- SHT_STRTAB
- This section holds a string table. An object file may
have multiple string table sections.
- SHT_RELA
- This section holds relocation
entries with explicit addends, such as type Elf32_Rela for the 32-bit class
of object files. An object may have multiple relocation sections.
- SHT_HASH
- This section holds a symbol hash table. An object participating in dynamic
linking must contain a symbol hash table. An object file may have only one
hash table.
- SHT_DYNAMIC
- This section holds information for dynamic linking.
An object file may have only one dynamic section.
- SHT_NOTE
- This section
holds information that marks the file in some way.
- SHT_NOBITS
- A section
of this type occupies no space in the file but otherwise resembles SHT_PROGBITS.
Although this section contains no bytes, the sh_offset member contains
the conceptual file offset.
- SHT_REL
- This section holds relocation offsets
without explicit addends, such as type Elf32_Rel for the 32-bit class of
object files. An object file may have multiple relocation sections.
- SHT_SHLIB
- This section is reserved but has unspecified semantics.
- SHT_DYNSYM
- This
section holds a minimal set of dynamic linking symbols. An object file can
also contain a SHT_SYMTAB section.
- SHT_LOPROC
- This value up to and including
SHT_HIPROC is reserved for processor-specific semantics.
- SHT_HIPROC
- This
value down to and including SHT_LOPROC is reserved for processor-specific
semantics.
- SHT_LOUSER
- This value specifies the lower bound of the range
of indices reserved for application programs.
- SHT_HIUSER
- This value specifies
the upper bound of the range of indices reserved for application programs.
Section types between SHT_LOUSER and SHT_HIUSER may be used by the application,
without conflicting with current or future system-defined section types.
- sh_flags
- Sections support one-bit flags that describe miscellaneous attributes.
If a flag bit is set in sh_flags, the attribute is "on" for the section.
Otherwise, the attribute is "off" or does not apply. Undefined attributes
are set to zero.
- SHF_WRITE
- This section contains data that should be writable
during process execution.
- SHF_ALLOC
- This section occupies memory during
process execution. Some control sections do not reside in the memory image
of an object file. This attribute is off for those sections.
- SHF_EXECINSTR
- This section contains executable machine instructions.
- SHF_MASKPROC
- All
bits included in this mask are reserved for processor-specific semantics.
- sh_addr
- If this section appears in the memory image of a process, this
member holds the address at which the section’s first byte should reside.
Otherwise, the member contains zero.
- sh_offset
- This member’s value holds
the byte offset from the beginning of the file to the first byte in the
section. One section type, SHT_NOBITS, occupies no space in the file, and
its sh_offset member locates the conceptual placement in the file.
- sh_size
- This member holds the section’s size in bytes. Unless the section type is
SHT_NOBITS, the section occupies sh_size bytes in the file. A section of
type SHT_NOBITS may have a nonzero size, but it occupies no space in the
file.
- sh_link
- This member holds a section header table index link, whose
interpretation depends on the section type.
- sh_info
- This member holds extra
information, whose interpretation depends on the section type.
- sh_addralign
- Some sections have address alignment constraints. If a section holds a doubleword,
the system must ensure doubleword alignment for the entire section. That
is, the value of sh_addr must be congruent to zero, modulo the value of
sh_addralign. Only zero and positive integral powers of two are allowed.
Values of zero or one mean the section has no alignment constraints.
- sh_entsize
- Some sections hold a table of fixed-sized entries, such as a symbol table.
For such a section, this member gives the size in bytes for each entry.
This member contains zero if the section does not hold a table of fixed-size
entries.
Various sections hold program and control information:
.- This section
holds uninitialized data that contributes to the program’s memory image.
By definition, the system initializes the data with zeros when the program
begins to run. This section is of type SHT_NOBITS. The attribute types are
SHF_ALLOC and SHF_WRITE.
.- This section holds version control information.
This section is of type SHT_PROGBITS. No attribute types are used.
.- This section
holds initialized pointers to the C++ constructor functions. This section
is of type SHT_PROGBITS. The attribute types are SHF_ALLOC and SHF_WRITE.
.- This section holds initialized data that contribute to the program’s memory
image. This section is of type SHT_PROGBITS. The attribute types are SHF_ALLOC
and SHF_WRITE.
.- This section holds initialized data that contribute to the
program’s memory image. This section is of type SHT_PROGBITS. The attribute
types are SHF_ALLOC and SHF_WRITE.
.- This section holds information for symbolic
debugging. The contents are unspecified. This section is of type SHT_PROGBITS.
No attribute types are used.
.- This section holds initialized pointers to
the C++ destructor functions. This section is of type SHT_PROGBITS. The attribute
types are SHF_ALLOC and SHF_WRITE.
.- This section holds dynamic linking information.
The section’s attributes will include the SHF_ALLOC bit. Whether the SHF_WRITE
bit is set is processor-specific. This section is of type SHT_DYNAMIC. See
the attributes above.
.- This section holds strings needed for dynamic linking,
most commonly the strings that represent the names associated with symbol
table entries. This section is of type SHT_STRTAB. The attribute type used
is SHF_ALLOC.
.- This section holds the dynamic linking symbol table. This section
is of type SHT_DYNSYM. The attribute used is SHF_ALLOC.
.- This section holds
executable instructions that contribute to the process termination code.
When a program exits normally the system arranges to execute the code in
this section. This section is of type SHT_PROGBITS. The attributes used are
SHF_ALLOC and SHF_EXECINSTR.
..- This section holds the version symbol table,
an array of ElfN_Half elements. This section is of type SHT_GNU_versym. The
attribute type used is SHF_ALLOC.
..- This section holds the version symbol
definitions, a table of ElfN_Verdef structures. This section is of type
SHT_GNU_verdef. The attribute type used is SHF_ALLOC.
..- This section holds
the version symbol needed elements, a table of ElfN_Verneed structures.
This section is of type SHT_GNU_versym. The attribute type used is SHF_ALLOC.
.- This section holds the global offset table. This section is of type SHT_PROGBITS.
The attributes are processor-specific.
.- This section holds a symbol hash table.
This section is of type SHT_HASH. The attribute used is SHF_ALLOC.
.- This section
holds executable instructions that contribute to the process initialization
code. When a program starts to run the system arranges to execute the code
in this section before calling the main program entry point. This section
is of type SHT_PROGBITS. The attributes used are SHF_ALLOC and SHF_EXECINSTR.
.- This section holds the pathname of a program interpreter. If the file has
a loadable segment that includes the section, the section’s attributes will
include the SHF_ALLOC bit. Otherwise, that bit will be off. This section
is of type SHT_PROGBITS.
.- This section holds line number information for
symbolic debugging, which describes the correspondence between the program
source and the machine code. The contents are unspecified. This section is
of type SHT_PROGBITS. No attribute types are used.
.- This section holds information
in the "Note Section" format. This section is of type SHT_NOTE. No attribute
types are used. OpenBSD native executables usually contain a .note.openbsd.ident
section to identify themselves, for the kernel to bypass any compatibility
ELF binary emulation tests when loading the file.
..-- This section is used in
Linux object files for declaring stack attributes. This section is of type
SHT_PROGBITS. The only attribute used is SHF_EXECINSTR. This indicates to
the GNU linker that the object file requires an executable stack.
.- This section
holds the procedure linkage table. This section is of type SHT_PROGBITS.
The attributes are processor-specific.
.- This section holds relocation information
as described below. If the file has a loadable segment that includes relocation,
the section’s attributes will include the SHF_ALLOC bit. Otherwise, the bit
will be off. By convention, "NAME" is supplied by the section to which the
relocations apply. Thus a relocation section for .text normally would have
the name .rel.text. This section is of type SHT_REL.
.- This section holds relocation
information as described below. If the file has a loadable segment that
includes relocation, the section’s attributes will include the SHF_ALLOC
bit. Otherwise, the bit will be off. By convention, "NAME" is supplied by
the section to which the relocations apply. Thus a relocation section for
.text normally would have the name .rela.text. This section is of type SHT_RELA.
.- This section holds read-only data that typically contributes to a nonwritable
segment in the process image. This section is of type SHT_PROGBITS. The attribute
used is SHF_ALLOC.
.- This section holds read-only data that typically contributes
to a nonwritable segment in the process image. This section is of type SHT_PROGBITS.
The attribute used is SHF_ALLOC.
.- This section holds section names. This section
is of type SHT_STRTAB. No attribute types are used.
.- This section holds strings,
most commonly the strings that represent the names associated with symbol
table entries. If the file has a loadable segment that includes the symbol
string table, the section’s attributes will include the SHF_ALLOC bit. Otherwise,
the bit will be off. This section is of type SHT_STRTAB.
.- This section holds
a symbol table. If the file has a loadable segment that includes the symbol
table, the section’s attributes will include the SHF_ALLOC bit. Otherwise,
the bit will be off. This section is of type SHT_SYMTAB.
.- This section holds
the "text", or executable instructions, of a program. This section is of
type SHT_PROGBITS. The attributes used are SHF_ALLOC and SHF_EXECINSTR.
String table sections hold null-terminated character sequences, commonly
called strings. The object file uses these strings to represent symbol and
section names. One references a string as an index into the string table
section. The first byte, which is index zero, is defined to hold a null
byte (aq\0aq). Similarly, a string table’s last byte is defined to hold a
null byte, ensuring null termination for all strings.
An object file’s symbol
table holds information needed to locate and relocate a program’s symbolic
definitions and references. A symbol table index is a subscript into this
array.
typedef struct {
uint32_t st_name;
Elf32_Addr st_value;
uint32_t st_size;
unsigned char st_info;
unsigned char st_other;
uint16_t st_shndx;
} Elf32_Sym;
typedef struct {
uint32_t st_name;
unsigned char st_info;
unsigned char st_other;
uint16_t st_shndx;
Elf64_Addr st_value;
uint64_t st_size;
} Elf64_Sym;
The 32-bit and 64-bit versions have the same members, just in a different
order.
- st_name
- This member holds an index into the object file’s symbol
string table, which holds character representations of the symbol names.
If the value is nonzero, it represents a string table index that gives
the symbol name. Otherwise, the symbol table has no name.
- st_value
- This member
gives the value of the associated symbol.
- st_size
- Many symbols have associated
sizes. This member holds zero if the symbol has no size or an unknown size.
- st_info
- This member specifies the symbol’s type and binding attributes:
- STT_NOTYPE
- The symbol’s type is not defined.
- STT_OBJECT
- The symbol is associated
with a data object.
- STT_FUNC
- The symbol is associated with a function or
other executable code.
- STT_SECTION
- The symbol is associated with a section.
Symbol table entries of this type exist primarily for relocation and normally
have STB_LOCAL bindings.
- STT_FILE
- By convention, the symbol’s name gives
the name of the source file associated with the object file. A file symbol
has STB_LOCAL bindings, its section index is SHN_ABS, and it precedes the
other STB_LOCAL symbols of the file, if it is present.
- STT_LOPROC
- This value
up to and including STT_HIPROC is reserved for processor-specific semantics.
- STT_HIPROC
- This value down to and including STT_LOPROC is reserved for
processor-specific semantics.
- STB_LOCAL
- Local symbols are not visible outside
the object file containing their definition. Local symbols of the same name
may exist in multiple files without interfering with each other.
- STB_GLOBAL
- Global symbols are visible to all object files being combined. One file’s
definition of a global symbol will satisfy another file’s undefined reference
to the same symbol.
- STB_WEAK
- Weak symbols resemble global symbols, but their
definitions have lower precedence.
- STB_LOPROC
- This value up to and including
STB_HIPROC is reserved for processor-specific semantics.
- STB_HIPROC
- This
value down to and including STB_LOPROC is reserved for processor-specific
semantics.
- There are macros for packing and unpacking the binding and type
fields:
- ELF32_ST_BIND(info)
- or ELF64_ST_BIND(info) extract a binding from
an st_info value.
- ELF32_ST_TYPE(info)
- or ELF64_ST_TYPE(info)
extract a type from an st_info value.
- ELF32_ST_INFO(bind, type)
- or ELF64_ST_INFO(bind,
type)
convert a binding and a type into an st_info value.
- st_other
- This member
defines the symbol visibility.
- STV_DEFAULT
- Default symbol visibility rules.
- STV_INTERNAL
- Processor-specific hidden class.
- STV_HIDDEN
- Symbol is unavailable
in other modules.
- STV_PROTECTED
- Not preemptible, not exported.
There are
macros for extracting the visibility type:
ELF32_ST_VISIBILITY(other)
or
ELF64_ST_VISIBILITY(other)
- st_shndx
- Every symbol table entry is "defined"
in relation to some section. This member holds the relevant section header
table index.
Relocation is the process of connecting symbolic references
with symbolic definitions. Relocatable files must have information that
describes how to modify their section contents, thus allowing executable
and shared object files to hold the right information for a process’s program
image. Relocation entries are these data.
Relocation structures that do not
need an addend:
typedef struct {
Elf32_Addr r_offset;
uint32_t r_info;
} Elf32_Rel;
typedef struct {
Elf64_Addr r_offset;
uint64_t r_info;
} Elf64_Rel;
Relocation structures that need an addend:
typedef struct {
Elf32_Addr r_offset;
uint32_t r_info;
int32_t r_addend;
} Elf32_Rela;
typedef struct {
Elf64_Addr r_offset;
uint64_t r_info;
int64_t r_addend;
} Elf64_Rela;
- r_offset
- This member gives the location at which to apply the relocation
action. For a relocatable file, the value is the byte offset from the beginning
of the section to the storage unit affected by the relocation. For an executable
file or shared object, the value is the virtual address of the storage
unit affected by the relocation.
- r_info
- This member gives both the symbol
table index with respect to which the relocation must be made and the type
of relocation to apply. Relocation types are processor-specific. When the
text refers to a relocation entry’s relocation type or symbol table index,
it means the result of applying ELF[32|64]_R_TYPE or ELF[32|64]_R_SYM, respectively,
to the entry’s r_info member.
- r_addend
- This member specifies a constant addend
used to compute the value to be stored into the relocatable field.
The
.dynamic section contains a series of structures that hold relevant dynamic
linking information. The d_tag member controls the interpretation of d_un.
typedef struct {
Elf32_Sword d_tag;
union {
Elf32_Word d_val;
Elf32_Addr d_ptr;
} d_un;
} Elf32_Dyn;
extern Elf32_Dyn _DYNAMIC[];
typedef struct {
Elf64_Sxword d_tag;
union {
Elf64_Xword d_val;
Elf64_Addr d_ptr;
} d_un;
} Elf64_Dyn;
extern Elf64_Dyn _DYNAMIC[];
- d_tag
- This member may have any of the following values:
- DT_NULL
- Marks
end of dynamic section
- DT_NEEDED
- String table offset to name of a needed
library
- DT_PLTRELSZ
- Size in bytes of PLT relocs
- DT_PLTGOT
- Address of PLT
and/or GOT
- DT_HASH
- Address of symbol hash table
- DT_STRTAB
- Address of string
table
- DT_SYMTAB
- Address of symbol table
- DT_RELA
- Address of Rela relocs
table
- DT_RELASZ
- Size in bytes of Rela table
- DT_RELAENT
- Size in bytes of
a Rela table entry
- DT_STRSZ
- Size in bytes of string table
- DT_SYMENT
- Size
in bytes of a symbol table entry
- DT_INIT
- Address of the initialization
function
- DT_FINI
- Address of the termination function
- DT_SONAME
- String table
offset to name of shared object
- DT_RPATH
- String table offset to library
search path (deprecated)
- DT_SYMBOLIC
- Alert linker to search this shared
object before the executable for symbols
- DT_REL
- Address of Rel relocs table
- DT_RELSZ
- Size in bytes of Rel table
- DT_RELENT
- Size in bytes of a Rel table
entry
- DT_PLTREL
- Type of reloc the PLT refers (Rela or Rel)
- DT_DEBUG
- Undefined
use for debugging
- DT_TEXTREL
- Absence of this indicates no relocs should
apply to a nonwritable segment
- DT_JMPREL
- Address of reloc entries solely
for the PLT
- DT_BIND_NOW
- Instruct dynamic linker to process all relocs before
transferring control to the executable
- DT_RUNPATH
- String table offset to
library search path
- DT_LOPROC
- Start of processor-specific semantics
- DT_HIPROC
End of processor-specific semantics
- d_val
- This member represents integer
values with various interpretations.
- d_ptr
- This member represents program
virtual addresses. When interpreting these addresses, the actual address
should be computed based on the original file value and memory base address.
Files do not contain relocation entries to fixup these addresses.
- _DYNAMIC
- Array containing all the dynamic structures in the .dynamic section. This
is automatically populated by the linker.
ELF first appeared
in System V. The ELF format is an adopted standard.
The extensions for e_phnum,
e_shnum and e_strndx respectively are Linux extensions. Sun, BSD and AMD64
also support them; for further information, look under SEE ALSO.
as(1)
, gdb(1)
, ld(1)
, objdump(1)
, execve(2)
, core(5)
Hewlett-Packard,
Elf-64 Object File Format.
Santa Cruz Operation, System V Application Binary
Interface.
UNIX System Laboratories, "Object Files", Executable and Linking
Format (ELF).
Sun Microsystems, Linker and Libraries Guide.
AMD64 ABI Draft,
System V Application Binary Interface AMD64 Architecture Processor Supplement.
This page is part of release 3.78 of the Linux man-pages project.
A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the
latest version of this page, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
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